Psalm 106:7
Our fathers understood not thy wonders in Egypt; they remembered not the multitude of thy mercies; but provoked him at the sea, even at the Red sea.
Cross-reference
Psalm 106:45 contrasts human forgetfulness with God's faithful remembrance of His covenant and steadfast love.
Psalm 105:5 commands remembering God's wonders — the very thing Israel failed to do in Psalm 106:7.
Psalm 78:42 echoes the same complaint: Israel forgot God's power and redemption, just as here they did not remember His steadfast love.
Psalm 51:1 appeals to God's abundant mercy and steadfast love — the same divine attribute Israel disregarded in Psalm 106:7.
Psalm 5:7 uses the same phrase 'abundance of your steadfast love' — the attribute Israel failed to remember in Psalm 106:7.
Psalm 78:8 warns against being like the stubborn, rebellious fathers, directly paralleling the forgetfulness and rebellion here.
Psalm 103:2 calls to 'forget not all his benefits,' contrasting the forgetfulness of God's works in this verse.
Exodus 14:12 records the Israelites' complaint at the Red Sea, directly illustrating the rebellion mentioned in the psalm.
In Mark 8:17-21, Jesus rebukes the disciples for not understanding the loaves, echoing the fathers' failure to remember God's miracles in Psalm 106:7.
Lamentations 3:32 affirms God's compassion according to the abundance of His steadfast love — the same attribute Israel ignored in Psalm 106:7.
Isaiah 63:7 recounts the abundance of God's steadfast love — the very thing Israel failed to remember in Psalm 106:7.
In Isaiah 44:18, the description of idolaters' blindness mirrors the fathers' failure to perceive God's miracles in Psalm 106:7.
Exodus 14:11 records the very rebellion at the Red Sea that Psalm 106:7 describes — Israel's complaint against Moses.
Deuteronomy 15:15 commands remembering slavery and redemption from Egypt — the memory Israel lacked in Psalm 106:7.
Nehemiah 9:17 recounts Israel's refusal to obey and forgetfulness of wonders, mirroring the rebellion at the Red Sea described here.
1 Corinthians 10:1 directly references the Red Sea crossing, the very scene of rebellion in Psalm 106:7.
Exodus 14:21 describes the miraculous parting of the sea, the wondrous work the psalm says they failed to consider.
Jeremiah 7:24 describes stubborn disobedience and not inclining the ear, similar to the rebellion at the Red Sea.
Jeremiah 3:25 confesses sin from youth, including the fathers, paralleling the admission of rebellion here.
Isaiah 42:20 describes seeing but not observing, similar to not considering God's wondrous works in this verse.
Nehemiah 9:10 recounts the signs and wonders against Pharaoh, the very works the psalm says they disregarded.
Deuteronomy 26:8 summarizes the exodus wonders, directly paralleling the wondrous works the psalm says they ignored.
In Deuteronomy 29:4, the lack of spiritual perception given by God parallels the fathers' failure to consider God's miracles in Psalm 106:7.
In Mark 4:12, Jesus explains parables as hiding truth from those who see but don't perceive, similar to the fathers' failure to understand in Psalm 106:7.
Nehemiah 9:19 highlights God's continued mercy in the wilderness despite Israel's forgetfulness, echoing the theme of steadfast love.
Acts 13:17 recounts God's choice and deliverance from Egypt, the same event where the fathers rebelled in Psalm 106:7.
Numbers 14:19 appeals to God's steadfast love for forgiveness, contrasting with the psalm's note that they forgot that love.
In Deuteronomy 32:28, Israel is called a nation without sense, echoing the fathers' lack of thought about God's miracles in Psalm 106:7.
In Deuteronomy 32:29, the wish for Israel to be wise contrasts with the fathers' failure to understand in Psalm 106:7.
Micah 6:4 recounts the very deliverance from Egypt that the fathers in Psalm 106:7 failed to consider.
Jeremiah 32:30 echoes Israel's persistent rebellion from their youth, paralleling the fathers' rebellion in Egypt described here.
Acts 7:25 shows the Israelites not understanding Moses' role as deliverer, similar to the fathers not understanding God's works.
Zechariah 1:4 warns against imitating the fathers who ignored God's call, just as these fathers ignored His wonders.
Isaiah 65:7 mentions the iniquities of the fathers, linking to the rebellion of the fathers in this verse.
Isaiah 63:9 speaks of God's love and redemption despite affliction, contrasting with Israel's forgetfulness of that love.
Deuteronomy 8:2 commands remembering God's leading, contrasting with the psalm's failure to remember.
Isaiah 43:27 states that the first father sinned, connecting to the fathers' rebellion mentioned here.